Seating position and patterns of severely injured body parts among child passengers in motor vehicle crashes: Japan as a distinct case
- PMID: 29671372
- DOI: 10.1080/17457300.2018.1456469
Seating position and patterns of severely injured body parts among child passengers in motor vehicle crashes: Japan as a distinct case
Abstract
This study describes injury patterns and outcomes related to the seating position of child passengers involved in motor vehicle crashes in Japan. Using data obtained from a national trauma registry database, we compared the occurrence of injuries by body parts, length of hospital stay and in-hospital deaths between front-seating and rear-seating among children. We analysed 166 children aged 0-5 years and 205 children aged 6-12 years. No significant differences were observed between front- and rear-seating for injured body parts, length of hospital stay or in-hospital deaths in the 0-5-year-old victims. Among those aged 6-12 years, rear-seating was associated with a higher incidence of head and chest injuries but the length of stay or in-hospital deaths did not differ. These findings contrast those of previous studies, which found that rear-seating reduces injury risk, possibly attributed to low age-appropriate restraint use among school-aged children in Japan.
Keywords: Motor vehicle crash; body parts; children; passenger; seating position.
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